BENT KNEE: BENT KNEE (2011)
1) Urban Circus; 2) I Don't
Love You Anymore; 3) Funeral; 4) I've Been This Way Before; 5) After Years Of
Love; 6) Little Specks Of Calcium; 7) Styrofoam Heart; 8) Nave.
So, what sort of music should one expect from a
group named «Bent Knee»? My first answer would probably be «jazz fusion»,
because this is the kind of thoroughly meaningless title that we typically
encounter on all-instrumental records by them jazz wankers. However, once you
learn that the name is actually an amalgamation of the names of the group's
leaders — guitarist Ben Levin and
keyboardist/singer Courtney Swain —
the answer is probably going to shift to «indie pop», because only (or at
least, mostly) indie pop artists engage in that kind of silliness mixed with
gratuitous egotism.
Odd enough, while Bent Knee are certainly much
closer to indie pop than to jazz fusion, their project is far more ambitious
than simply making music according to one or two set formulas. After all, they
came together in the Berklee College of Music, which, according to the
Wikipedia description, "offers college-level courses in a wide range of
contemporary and historic styles, including rock, flamenco, hip hop, reggae,
salsa, and bluegrass", and one would be sorely disappointed if the alumni
of such a wonderful place would waste their tuition fees on anything less than
Comprehensive and Total Eclecticism. In other words, Bent Knee make music that
is all over the place — so all over the place, in fact, that they will always
have a hard time trying to make us understand what exactly is it all about.
In simple terms and in the first place, it is
probably all about the vocals of Courtney Swain, which happen to be the first
attention-grabbing component of the record. Timbre-wise, she reminds me most of
Beth Gibbons, with whom she shares similar levels of intensity and
knife-sharpness; on the other hand, she is much more of a «rock» singer than Beth,
and often shows a pissed-off, hysterical side that is more reminiscent of that other Courtney... (I do so hope that
hard drugs are a no-no at the Berklee College, but Swain looks perfectly
healthy to me). It is on the more quiet numbers, such as ʽFuneralʼ, where she
tends to fade into the background: her lyrical side is competent, but
unexceptional, and she is truly at her best when her bandmates start lighting
up the little pieces of paper between her toes. They also like to put subtle,
Björkish electronic effects on her vocals sometimes, or run them through an
echo chamber for an even more epic reaction, which is fine enough if the source
vocal is already powerful on its own.
As for the music, Bent Knee is hard to categorize in any other terms than the general
designation of «indie rock», whatever that term is supposed to mean in the
2010s. Thus, ʽUrban Circusʼ opens proceedings in near-classic «industrial»
mode, with distorted factory-level power blasts against which Swain's desperate
voice is battling as against prison bars. It's like the gloom of classic
Portishead, enhanced by the cling-clang of classic Nine Inch Nails, though not
as deep penetrating as either: Bent Knee have the typical «college kid»
problem in that, as artists, it is hard for them to go all the way — they are,
apparently, a bunch of deeply normal and well-meaning young people, greatly
moved and influenced by their moves and influences, but not as deeply disturbed
and wasted as any of those influences. Still, the very first track shows that
they know how to create a good old ruckus, and how to make the listener pay
attention by cleverly using the loud-quiet dynamics, integrating acoustic and
electronic elements, and merging together elements of ye olde blues-rock,
noise, and avantgarde jazz.
Perhaps their biggest mistake is in trying to
make themselves look «darker» than they actually are. Most of the songs have a
sweeping tragic feel; most of the lyrics are about relationships gone wrong and
the cosmic consequences of that; most of the time Courtney Swain sounds either
angry at her man, sad about her man, or crazy because her man drove her to it.
It rarely seems sincere, and the overall feel is more theatrical, reaching
vaudevillian peaks when they actually go for straightahead vaudeville — once,
on the crazy polka number ʽI've Been This Way Beforeʼ — but always feeling like
they are just putting on a show for us even on the most «intimate» numbers (the
acoustic ballad ʽAfter Years Of Loveʼ, which eventually grows into a lushly
psychedelic Floydian meadow of chiming pianos, slide guitars, and distant vocal
harmonies). Nevertheless, almost everything they do is interesting at least in
some respect: every track shows either musical or, yep, theatrical creativity.
Thus, ʽI Don't Love You Anymoreʼ in its first
fifteen seconds combines impressionist piano playing, synth-pop, and «heavy
industrial blues-rock» — with the guitarist throwing in a flashy Van
Halen-esque guitar solo, and Swain's multi-tracked vocals raising fifty times
more hell around her imaginary lover than, say, a Taylor Swift could do with an
army of producers behind her back. On ʽLittle Specks Of Calciumʼ, they invent a
cozy little twee-pop melody only to deconstruct it to total minimalism, and
then follow it up with a moody dialog between incompatible lovers ("but
you are frozen... cold... frozen... cold..." — "and you are burning
me alive! you are burning me alive!") that is a great find by itself (I
only wish they could have found a better musical realisation for it, with two
counter-motifs, perhaps, rather than this monotonous industrial pump). And on
the album's longest track, ʽStyrofoam Heartʼ, they combine everything they got
(gorgeous singing, hysterical singing, beautiful harmonies, ominous harmonies, romantic
piano rolls, heavy metal, and mourning woo-woo-woos that seem incidentally
ripped off from Radiohead's ʽStreet Spiritʼ — which reminds me that I probably
did not yet mention Radiohead as a serious influence on these guys, but then,
should I really have?..).
The good news, then, is that Bent Knee created
their own sound; the bad news is that they have not been able to solve the
nagging problem — this sound is all too easily decomposed into constituents,
each of which on its own is ultimately preferable to the synthesis. Yet even
so, the band manages to stand out against its peers by taking things to an
overall higher level of intensity than most do. And the fact that they have set
themselves such a wide territory to cover with their formula also made it
worth the while to hold your breath and wait for whatever else they might have
in store for us. In the meantime, this self-titled debut certainly deserves its
thumbs up.
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